Disappearing GenocideThe Media and the Death Of Slobodan
Milosevic by Media Lens
www.dissidentvoice.org
March 21, 2006

“If we don't know history, then we are ready
meat for carnivorous politicians and the intellectuals and journalists who
supply the carving knives. But if we know some history, if we know how
many times presidents have lied to us, we will not be fooled again.”

-- Howard Zinn, historian

Introduction: 2003 And All That

Three years on, it is clear that the case
for war against Iraq was based on lies. Despite the cover-ups, insider
compromise and silence, there can be no serious doubt that the lies were
conscious and carefully planned.

The real target of Western “intelligence”
was not Iraq, but the British and American public -- the goal was to
frighten and deceive us to support a war fought for elite interests. It
was to persuade us to send our troops to kill and die for profits. It was
to persuade us to ignore clear warnings that, in all likelihood, we would
be subject to terrorist reprisals. Such risks were clearly deemed a small
price to pay for the prize that mattered -- control of Iraqi oil and
enhanced influence in the region and beyond.

Iraq, of course, never posed any kind of
threat to the West. Even if portions of Saddam’s WMD had been retained,
they would have been no danger to America, Britain and Israel bristling
with veritable doomsday weapons. Saddam Hussein may be an animal, but he
is a political animal -- a survivor, not someone who would have committed
national suicide by launching WMD at the West.

An honest press would be hyper-sensitive to
these issues -- it would be keenly aware that Bush and Blair had lied, and
would be re-evaluating earlier wars, earlier claims of “humanitarian
intervention”, in light of what they now know.

Given this context, something truly
astonishing is revealed by media coverage of the death of Slobodan
Milosevic. Because it could not be clearer from current media reporting
that journalists have come to understand that the 78-day NATO bombing of
Serbia from March 24 to June 10, 1999 was also based on lies. It is
therefore clear to them that the government deceived the public and, once
again, the media supported the deception. And yet, despite this, despite
the endless horror of Iraq, journalists cannot bring themselves to expose
either the earlier lies of government or their own complicity in them.

Virtually to a man and woman, journalists
sold the lie to the public in 1999. This makes them complicit in the
killing of 500 Serb civilians and $100 billion worth of destruction. More
importantly (for the media), the lies about Kosovo provided a template and
justification for the subsequent lies surrounding the “humanitarian
intervention” in Iraq. An Observer editorial gives an idea of the
significance, explaining that the West’s “belated response to political
thuggery” in the Balkans resulted in “a new doctrine of humanitarian
intervention.” It was led “at first by President Clinton over Bosnia, and
again in Kosovo. The rationale behind those interventions was then invoked
for the invasion of Iraq”. (Leader, “Let a dictator's death remind us of
the evil of unchecked nationalism,” The Observer, March 12, 2006)

Dissident writer Alexander Cockburn
translates this into meaningful English: “the legal, military and
journalistic banditry that have accompanied the Iraq enterprise from the
start were all field-tested in the late 1990s in the Balkans”. (Cockburn,
“Did Milosevic or His Accusers ‘Cheat Justice’?: The Show Trial That Went
Wrong,” CounterPunch, March 14, 2006)

Kosovo -- Genocide It
Wasn’t

Just as they knew Iraq possessed WMD in
2003, so in 1999 politicians and journalists knew exactly what the Serbs
were doing in Kosovo. Bill Clinton, then President, talked of “deliberate,
systematic efforts at ethnic cleansing and genocide.” (John M. Broder,
“Clinton underestimated Serbs, he acknowledges,” New York Times,
June 26, 1999)

British Defense Secretary, George Robertson,
insisted that intervention in Kosovo was vital to stop “a regime which is
intent on genocide.” (Nic North, Kevin Maguire And Harry Arnold, “A pilot
saved,” Daily Mirror, March 29, 1999)

A year later, Robertson conjured up the
ghost of Nazism to justify NATO's action:

“We were faced with a situation where there
was this killing going on, this cleansing going on -- the kind of ethnic
cleansing we thought had disappeared after the second world war. You were
seeing people there coming in trains, the cattle trains, with refugees
once again.” (ITV, Jonathan Dimbleby program, June 11, 2000)

US Defense Secretary, William Cohen,
claimed: “We’ve now seen about 100,000 military-aged men missing... They
may have been murdered.” (Quoted, Philip Hammond and Edward S. Herman,
Degraded Capability, Pluto Press, 2000, p.139)

Across the spectrum, the media instantly
rallied to the cause. A Daily Mail news report was titled: “Flight
from genocide; as half a million Kosovans flee their homes in terror from
Milosevic, a haunting echo of another war 60 years ago.” (Steve Doughty,
Daily Mail, March 29, 1999)

The Mirror referred to “Echoes of the
Holocaust.” (Quoted, John Pilger, “The lies that brought hell,” Morning
Star, December 13, 2004) The News of the World declared: “The
aim of this war is to stop Serbian genocide in Kosovo.” (Cited, Monitor,
The Independent, April 19, 1999) A 2002 BBC documentary on the
alleged Serbian genocide, “Exposed”, was billed as a program marking
Holocaust Memorial Day. (“Exposed”, BBC2, January 27, 2002)

As we will see, this constitutes a tiny
sample -- in fact British media were filled with hundreds of claims of
genocide in Kosovo. A Lexis Nexis database search similarly showed that
between 1998-1999, the Los Angeles Times, New York Times,
Washington Post, Newsweek and Time used “genocide” 220
times to describe the actions of Serbia in Kosovo.

And yet, following the war, NATO sources
reported that 2,000 people had been killed in Kosovo on all sides in the
year prior to bombing. In November 1999, the Wall Street Journal
published the results of its own investigation. Instead of “the huge
killing fields some investigators were led to expect . . . the pattern is
of scattered killings (mostly) in areas where the separatist Kosovo
Liberation Army had been active.”

The Journal concluded that NATO had
stepped up its claims about Serb killing fields when it “saw a fatigued
press corps drifting toward the contrarian story -- civilians killed by
NATO bombs. The war in Kosovo was cruel, bitter, savage. Genocide it
wasn't.” (Quoted, Pilger, op., cit)

In 2004, Neil Clark, a Balkans specialist,
reviewed Milosevic’s trial in The Guardian, noting that the charges
relating to the war in Kosovo were expected to be the strongest part of
the case. But “not only has the prosecution signally failed to prove
Milosevic's personal responsibility for atrocities committed on the
ground, the nature and extent of the atrocities themselves has also been
called into question.” (Neil Clark, “The Milosevic trial is a travesty,”
The Guardian, February 12, 2004)

Philip Hammond of South Bank University
summarized the extent of the political and media deception:

“We may never know the true number of people
killed. But it seems reasonable to conclude that while people died in
clashes between the KLA and Yugoslav forces . . . the picture painted by
Nato -- of a systematic campaign of Nazi-style ‘genocide’ carried out by
Serbs -- was pure invention.” (Degraded Capability, The Media and the
Kosovo Crisis, edited by Philip Hammond and Edward S. Herman, Pluto
Press, 2000, p.129)

What A Difference Seven
Years Make -- The Genocide Disappears

Without recognizing their earlier role in
propagandizing for war against Serbia, and without drawing attention to
the implications for US-UK criminality, the media has completely
re-written its own history on Milosevic. A media database search by Media
Lens has failed to turn up a single example of any British journalist
describing Kosovo as “genocide” since Milosevic’s death.

The Sunday Express provides a typical
example of the kind of language used:

“He [Milosevic] was facing 66 counts of
genocide and crimes against humanity for his central role in the wars in
Bosnia, Croatia and Kosovo during the 1990s, in which 200,000 people died.
The worst incident was the massacre at Srebrenica in 1995, when an
estimated 8,000 Bosnian men were murdered.” (Tominey, “Milosevic cheats
justice by dying in his jail cell,” Sunday Express, March 12, 2006)

Thus, also, The Guardian website:

“Milosevic faced 66 charges including
genocide in Croatia, Bosnia and Kosovo. The most egregious act committed
under his watch was the Srebrenica massacre, in which up to 8,000 Muslim
men and boys died.” (Guardian Unlimited, “Closure perhaps, but no
justice,” March 11, 2006)

It seems the earlier massacre at Srebrenica
in 1995 is now Milosevic’s worst crime. Of the 1999 ‘genocide’ in Kosovo,
the alleged mass slaughter of tens of thousands, there is not a word.

And yet in 1999, The Guardian’s
Timothy Garton Ash observed that the Nato attack on Serbia was intended to
stop “something approaching genocide.” (Garton Ash, “Imagine no America,”
The Guardian, September 19, 2002)

Francis Wheen ridiculed opponents of the war
who believed, “that genocide is a lesser evil than bombing military
installations.” (Wheen, “Why we are right to bomb the Serbs,” The
Guardian, April 7, 1999)

Also in The Guardian, Jonathan
Freedland wrote of Milosevic’s plan “to empty a land of its people.” (Freedland,
“No way to spin a war,” The Guardian, April 21, 1999)

A Guardian editorial described the
war as nothing less than “a test for our generation.” (Leader, The
Guardian, March 26, 1999)

This month, Ian Traynor of The Guardian
wrote of Milosevic’s death:

“[H]e left a legacy of more than 200,000
dead in Bosnia and 2 million people (half the population) homeless. He
ethnically cleansed more than 800,000 Albanians from their homes in
Kosovo.” (Ian Traynor, “Obituary: Slobodan Milosevic,” The Guardian,
March 13, 2006)

Traynor mentions forced displacement in
Kosovo, but does not mention the “genocide” described by The Guardian
in 1999.

Admirably, John Laughland has even noted in
The Guardian how “witnesses have been trooping into The Hague for
nearly two years now, testifying that there was neither genocide in Kosovo
nor any plan to drive out the civilian ethnic Albanian population.” (Laughland,
“Criminal proceedings,” The Guardian, March 14, 2006)

But Laughland made no mention of what
virtually the entire British media, including The Guardian, had
been insisting just seven years earlier.

In 1999, a team of Observer reporters
wrote:

“His [Slobodan Milosevic's] troops in Serbia
are out of barracks. But in Kosovo they are scouring the fields, villages
and towns, pursuing their own version of a Balkan Final Solution.” (Peter
Beaumont, Justin Brown, John Hooper, Helena Smith and Ed Vulliamy,
“Hi-tech war and primitive slaughter,” The Observer, March 28,
1999)

An Observer leader declared:

“There are already grounds for considering
events in Kosovo as genocide.” (Leader, “Time, now, to raise the stakes,”
April 4, 1999)

Leading Observer commentator, Andrew
Rawnsley, wrote of how Milosevic had “embarked on his latest campaign of
‘ethnic cleansing,’ that vile euphemism for genocide.” (Rawnsley, “You
can’t deal with barbarism by washing your hands -- nor by wringing them,”
The Observer, March 28, 1999)

But “genocide” has now also disappeared from
The Observer’s vocabulary:

“Europe and the US watched and failed to act
for far too long. The consequences were the massacres of Srebrenica and
Gorazde, the prolonged siege of Sarajevo and the forced displacement of a
large part of Kosovo's Albanian population.” (“Leading article: Let a
dictator's death remind us of the evil of unchecked nationalism,” The
Observer, March 12, 2006)

Again, the emphasis is on Srebrenica. Again,
the crime is “forced displacement” rather than “genocide”.

In 1999, David Aaronovitch -- then employed
by The Independent -- described Serbian actions in Kosovo as “the worst
crime against humanity committed in Europe since the Second World War.” (Aaronovitch,
“The reality is that war, tragedy and incompetence go together,” The
Independent, May 11, 1999)

In a tragicomic moment, Aaronovitch even
asked:

“Is this cause, the cause of the Kosovar
Albanians, a cause that is worth suffering for? . . . Would I fight, or
(more realistically) would I countenance the possibility that members of
my family might die?”

And yet in reviewing the death of Milosevic
in The Times last week, Aaronovitch wrote of the 1995 massacre in
Srebrenica:

“In front of our eyes, just about, with our
full knowledge, thousands were taken to European fields -- just as they
had been 50 years earlier -- and murdered en masse. It was the most
shaming moment of my life. We had let it happen again.” (Aaronovitch, “The
meaning of Milosevic: how the Butcher of the Balkans changed us,” The
Times, March 14, 2006)

Aaronovitch made passing mention of Kosovo
four times in the article, but he made no mention at all of the extent of
the killing. Instead, he wrote:

“If Bosnia was the betrayal through inaction
and appeasement, Srebrenica the consequence and Kosovo the determination
not to let it happen again, then the line runs clear.”

But, according to Aaronovitch in 1999,
Kosovo was all about the fact that “it” had happened again in a
more extreme form. We wrote to Aaronovitch:

“Why no mention of this, given that Kosovo
was ‘the worst crime against humanity committed in Europe since the Second
World War?’ Do you still believe there was a genocide in Kosovo 1998-1999?
If so, what is your evidence for this?” (E-mail, March 14, 2006)

We have received no reply.

In 1999, Marcus Tanner wrote in The
Independent:

“NATO stepped up the air war against
Yugoslavia last night in what appeared a desperate race against time to
stop the Serbs from committing ‘genocide’ against Albanian civilians in
Kosovo.” (Tanner, “NATO targets troops as refugees flee genocide and tells
Serbs to pull back or die,” The Independent, March 29, 1999)

A month later, Tanner wrote:

“RTS [Radio Televisija Serbija] has turned
into a vehicle that whips up genocidal passions, a vital cog in the
business of psychologically preparing the entire Serbian nation for the
necessity of exterminating its enemies.” (Tanner, “I watched as ‘TV Slobbo’
turned into voice of hate,” The Independent, April 24, 1999)

This month, Tanner notes that in the spring
of 1998 a new group, the Kosovo Liberation Army -- which in fact was
funded by the CIA-organized an insurrection that spread rapidly across the
province:

“Milosevic responded with the ruthless
brutality that had become his trademark, pouring special police units and
paramilitaries into the province and burning down villages where the
rebels were based.” (Marcus Tanner, “Obituaries: Slobodan Milosevic,”
The Independent, March 13, 2006)

Tanner writes of how the “conflict worsened”
and how “the policy of burning villages and expelling Kosovar Albanians
was stepped up, massively so after Nato began air strikes” -- but about
the alleged “genocide” there is not one word.

Likewise, an Independent leader last week
referred, not to ‘genocide’, but to “thousands killed in Kosovo and
Croatia.” (Leader, “A death that cheats justice and Serbia's democracy,”
The Independent, March 13, 2006)

The Independent on Sunday also noted
blandly: “1998: Milosevic sends troops to crush uprising in Kosovo.” (“The
bloody life and times of the butcher of Belgrade,” The Independent on
Sunday, March 12, 2006)

In 1999, in an article titled, “Europe's
turn in the killing fields,” Jon Swain wrote in the Sunday Times:

“The symbols of death found in Cambodia
under Pol Pot are everywhere in Kosovo today -- in the blackened ruins of
houses where the victims of ‘ethnic cleansing’ lie, in the broken and
homeless people on the move in their tens of thousands.

“Only this is Europe. This continent has not
seen such a procession of human misery since the end of the second world
war, and for it to be allowed to happen again has diminished us all.”
(Swain, “Europe's turn in the killing fields,” Sunday Times, April
4, 1999)

Last week, the same newspaper argued:

“It was only in 1998-99, when Milosevic
reacted to Albanian guerrilla tactics in Kosovo with large-scale
repression, that the West finally ended its long courtship and took up
arms against him.” (Brendan Simms, “The butcher is dead,” Sunday Times,
March 12, 2006)

Again, no genocide -- the description cannot
be compared to the picture painted by the Sunday Times in 1999.

Conclusion -- Safety In
Numbers

In 1999, moving as an intellectual herd,
almost all journalists portrayed Serbian actions in Kosovo as “genocide”
and supported military action. The Blair government needed a black and
white picture of the world to generate public support for the killing. A
civil war was not enough, “scattered killings” were not enough. The state
needed atrocities, Nazi-style horror -- it needed a ‘genocide’. And the
media obliged. How ironic that politicians and journalists used
comparisons with the Nazi “Final Solution” to sell their war. In August
1939, one week before invading Poland, Adolf Hitler declared:

“The wave of appalling terrorism against the
[minority] inhabitants of Poland, and the atrocities that have been taking
place in that country are terrible for the victims, but intolerable for a
Great Power which has been expected to remain a passive onlooker. We will
not continue to tolerate the persecution of the minority, the killing of
many, and their forcible removal under the most cruel conditions.”
(Hitler, August 23, 1939, from letters sent to the UK and French
governments, the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives Monitor, April
2003;
www.swt.org/share/ancientciv.htm)

In 2006, again moving as a herd, journalists
have now silently rejected their own fraudulent claims of “genocide” from
1999. Moreover, they have rejected the need to examine how they got it
wrong, why, what it tells us about Clinton, Blair and Bush, and, above
all, what it tells us about the latest “humanitarian intervention” in
Iraq.